Targeted mutation screening panels expose systematic population bias in detection of cystic fibrosis risk
- PMID: 25880441
- DOI: 10.1038/gim.2015.52
Targeted mutation screening panels expose systematic population bias in detection of cystic fibrosis risk
Abstract
Purpose: Carrier screening for mutations contributing to cystic fibrosis (CF) is typically accomplished with panels composed of variants that are clinically validated primarily in patients of European descent. This approach has created a static genetic and phenotypic profile for CF. An opportunity now exists to reevaluate the disease profile of CFTR at a global population level.
Methods: CFTR allele and genotype frequencies were obtained from a nonpatient cohort with more than 60,000 unrelated personal genomes collected by the Exome Aggregation Consortium. Likely disease-contributing mutations were identified with the use of public database annotations and computational tools.
Results: We identified 131 previously described and likely pathogenic variants and another 210 untested variants with a high probability of causing protein damage. None of the current genetic screening panels or existing CFTR mutation databases covered a majority of deleterious variants in any geographical population outside of Europe.
Conclusions: Both clinical annotation and mutation coverage by commercially available targeted screening panels for CF are strongly biased toward detection of reproductive risk in persons of European descent. South and East Asian populations are severely underrepresented, in part because of a definition of disease that preferences the phenotype associated with European-typical CFTR alleles.
Comment in
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Bias in CFTR screening panels.Genet Med. 2016 Feb;18(2):209. doi: 10.1038/gim.2015.105. Epub 2015 Oct 29. Genet Med. 2016. PMID: 26513347 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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Response to Sosnay et al.Genet Med. 2016 Feb;18(2):209-10. doi: 10.1038/gim.2015.106. Epub 2015 Oct 29. Genet Med. 2016. PMID: 26513348 No abstract available.
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